You can find out more about Anglo American here:
http://www.angloamerican.com
http://www.facebook.com/angloamerican
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/angloamerican
http://www.slideshare.com/angloamerican
http://www.linkedin.com/company/anglo-american

big mining companies, like Rio Tinto, are cutting corners when it comes to the closing down of their hazardous mines. As a result of this, Queensland now has some 15,300 registered abandoned mines, sitting there. Which will now be the Queensland taxpayers responsibility to clean up, due to coal and mining companies finding ways to avoid and delay their land rehabilitation responsibilities.
Links:
https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/lockthegate/pages/3595/attachments/original/1476988533/Abandoned_Mines_in_QLD_11_Oct_FINAL.pdf?1476988533
https://envirojustice.org.au/sites/default/files/files/EJA_Dodging_clean_up_costs.pdf
Petition:
http://www.lockthegate.org.au/minerehab
ANA:
https://www.activist-news.com/
https://steemit.com/@activist-news
https://www.patreon.com/activistnews
Music:
Lightless Dawn by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100655
Artist: http://incompetech.com/

Here is some information about the Quinsam Coal Mine in the Quinsam River watershed 30 k west of Campbell River. It is just a matter of time before the arsenic in Long Lake will get into the Quinsam River which flows into the Campbell River. The finished doc will air on Shaw Cable and possibly CHEK TV and will be posted on You Tube in classroom friendly, short segments.

Thousands of tons of plastic scrap collected for recycling from British households have been transported and dumped on sites across the world.
We follow the trail of the UK's plastic waste through the country and around the world. Can Britain cope as the largest importer of our recycling shuts the door?
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In which John Green explores how Spain went from being a middling European power to one of the most powerful empires on Earth, thanks to their plunder of the New World in the 16th and 17th centuries. Learn how Spain managed to destroy the two biggest pre-Columbian civilizations, mine a mountain made of silver, mishandle their economy, and lose it all by the mid-1700s. Come along for the roller coaster ride with Charles I (he was also Charles V), Philip II, Atahualpa, Moctezuma, Hernán Cortés, and Francisco Pizarro as Spain rises and falls, and takes two empires and China down with them.
Crash Course World History is now available on DVD! http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-world-history-the-complete-series-dvd-set
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The Mining industry is facing an interesting future with growing demand as well as severe challenges. Being traditionally a labor-intensive industry, the trend now is to vastly increase the level of automation.

Ghana has had a gold rush but here, Afua Hirsch discovers how Chinese immigrants are profiting from industrialising the country's small-scale mining industry. She sees for herself that, for the many locals who chance losing life and limb for a piece of the same pie, the risks are rarely worth it, and explores where the responsibility for regulating this industry lies.
The price of gold: Chinese mining in Ghana documentary
Subscribe to the Guardian HERE: http://bitly.com/UvkFpD
Afua Hirsch reports on Ghana's gold rush in a film that discovers how Chinese immigrants are profiting from industrialising the country's small-scale mining industry. She sees for herself that, for the many locals who chance losing life and limb for a piece of the same pie, the risks are rarely worth it, and explores where the responsibility for regulating this industry lies.

"Bazzi – Mine (Lyrics) 🎵"
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We know the anacondas, boas, pythons, but have you heard about the Titanoboa? It is the queen of snakes and is also the largest ever known.
Correction: The titanoboa weighed 1.13 tons.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
DESCRIPTION:
Its scientific name is Titanoboa Cerrejonensis, because it was discovered in the Cerrejón coal mines, located in the State of La Guajira, in Colombia. In this place, the geologist Henry Garcia found a strange fossil in 1994. He labeled it a "petrified branch" and stored it in a counter in the mine's facilities.
The discovery was not free of challenges. To know what the titanoboa was feeding on and what its true size was, the head was needed. Until then, mining activity had helped the discovery of new species. While more layers of land miners extracted, more species were found and they seemed to be increasingly older. The problem was that this time the miners had announced that they were going to start digging in lower strata and that all the land from the time of the titanoboa would be removed, losing any trace of it. The paleontologists had to hurry.
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Check out these dangerous places you should never swim! From dangerous beaches with sharks lurking underwater to other popular tourist destinations, this top 10 list of scariest places to swim in the world should definitely be avoided!
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Watch our "Most DANGEROUS Beaches In The World!" video here: https://youtu.be/LW-PrAyESq4
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8. Berkeley Pit
If you’re in Butte, Montana and have 2 dollars to spend, then you might want to consider visiting Berkeley Pit. It is one of the only places in the world where you can pay to see toxic waste. It’s pretty easy, just pay the $2 admission fee and enter the viewing platform. The Berkeley Pit is a former open pit copper mine that is filled with highly acidic water. There are metals and toxic chemicals that seep out of the rocks, including copper, iron, arsenic, cadmium, zinc and sulfuric acid!
Of course, you don’t need me to tell you what would happen if you went for a swim there. The pit was closed in 1982, the groundwater slowly filled the pit and now, it is a serious environmental problem. In 1995 a flock of geese landed in the water and over 342 dead geese were recovered.
But the place is not really lifeless. New fungal and bacterial species have been found to have adapted to the extremely harsh conditions inside the pit. An even more interesting discovery was that these species developed a better production of highly toxic compounds to improve their chances for survival. Some of these might be useful against cancer!
However, there are other things about the Berkeley Pit the State of Montana should be concerned about. The water level in the pit is constantly rising. This is a very big problem because if the water level reaches the critical point it will contaminate the nearby ground water of the entire Butte valley which is home to more than 30,000 people! A water treatment plant was built in 2003 to help avoid this catastrophe and hopefully this year, 2018, the facility will be able to treat and divert the deadly water.
7. The Drake Passage
Back in the day, if you wanted to travel from the west coast of America to the east coast, you had to travel south and pass through what is known as the Drake Passage. This is where the Atlantic, Pacific, and Southern seas converge, and it is the fastest way to get to Antarctica. The Drake Passage is almost 1000 km wide and the current creates some extremely choppy water. Combine that with unpredictable weather and you can either have the smoothest water ever or an extremely violent journey.
Aside from the harsh weather, the Drake Passage is also known for its cold and deep waters. The waters are actually among the coldest on earth! And its average depth is of about 11,000 feet! Extremely large cargo ships that cannot go through the Panama Canal, are forced to go the long way around the Americas and go through the Drake Passage. Before the Panama Canal, the safest, most trafficked route to reach LA or San Francisco from New York was to go down to Cape Horne and around the west coast. It would take about 90 days.
There are many cruises that you can take to Antarctica and despite the rough crossing, many people say its worth it for the spectacular landscape and wildlife that you can see including dolphins, whales, and many kinds of birds. It is apparently quite the adventure!
Just make sure to take your motion sickness pill!! And whatever you do, don’t fall into the water!!
6. Saco River
Saco River is a popular recreational river and many people come here to visit every year hoping to cool off and have some fun. Located between New Hampshire and Maine, it is 220 km long. It passes through several counties and towns before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean at Saco Bay. You can camp near the river, rent a canoe, go tubing, or simply enjoy its beauty along the shore. It really sounds like a very nice place to spend your free time. If you ask the right person, that is.
There is a reason Saco River is on the list, after all! There is a local legend that the river is cursed. The story goes that in 1675, three drunken English sailors encountered a woman from the Sokokis tribe with her child. They made a bet about a European myth that stated that an Indian baby can swim upon birth as animals do. They attacked the woman, took her child and threw it in the lake where it drowned.
The woman’s husband, Squandro, the chief of the Sokokis tribe, cursed the river “to claim three lives every year until all white men fled its banks!”
Origins Explained is the place to be to find all the answers to your questions, from mysterious events and unsolved mysteries to everything there is to know about the world and its amazing animals!

This is the VOA Special English Economics Report, from http://voaspecialenglish.com | http://facebook.com/voalearningenglish
In early July, an oil pipeline broke under the Yellowstone River in the western state of Montana. The Yellowstone is America's longest undammed river. The spill happened downstream from Yellowstone National Park. The burst pipe spilled as much as one thousand barrels of crude oil -- more than one hundred sixty thousand liters -- into the river. Workers shut off the Exxon Mobil pipeline, and the company continued to clean up the spill. But the river was at flood levels and flowing quickly, carrying oil downstream into wetlands, fields and yards. Exxon Mobil spokeswoman Claire Hassett said local officials had ordered a temporary shutdown of the pipeline in May to check on its condition. They were concerned with heavy rains and rising waters. But, she said, "we determined that it was safe to operate and ... we don't know what has caused this leak."Susan Casey-Lefkowitz is with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group. She says the spill shows the dangers of mixing pipelines and waterways, "especially when they are running under some of our most precious river systems that are important not just for wildlife, but also for our communities. The Yellowstone River is critical for irrigation, for example, and so it serves the needs of a lot of farmers and communities along its path."Andy Black heads the Association of Oil Pipe Lines, an industry group whose members include pipeline owners and operators. He says, "We have processes both within companies and at the associations to share learning and best practices and pursue the goal which is zero accidents."Mr. Black says the industry does not need more federal and state rules. "The regulations cover the major causes of pipeline failures, and we do not see any gaps." Susan Casey-Lefkowitz disagrees. One concern, she says, is the future of the Ogallala aquifer, a major source of water for America's central plains. A proposed pipeline called Keystone XL would cross the Ogallala to carry oil produced from tar sands in Canada for processing in Texas. Ms. Casey-Lefkowitz says, "Ironically it would actually cross the Yellowstone River where the spill just happened." For VOA Special English, I'm Mario Ritter. For more programs and activities for learning English, go to voaspecialenglish.com. (Adapted from a radio program broadcast 08Jul2011)

PAUL ROBINSON (USA)
Research director, Southwest Research and Information Centre
THE SYMPOSIUM
The World Uranium Symposium addressed issues arising from the nuclear fuel chain, from mining uranium to its end-uses and byproducts for civilian or military purposes. Both scientific and community-based, the Symposium was organized around the following themes: health, environment, economy, ethics, governance, human rights and the rights of indigenous peoples. Open to the public, the symposium had hosted more than 300 people per day from 14 to 16 April 2015, and had included local, national and international representatives from the sectors of health, research, industry, education, civil society, policy makers and indigenous communities. local, national and/or international media were present. All presentations of the symposium will be posted in electronic formats (text and / or videos) after the Symposium, in French and / or English.
• April 14 (Day 1): Uranium mines and the nuclear life cycle : health and environmental issues
• April 15 (Day 2): Civil and military nuclear : ethics, economics and political issues
• April 16 (Day 3): Human rights, indigenous peoples' rights and governance issues
ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED
The Symposium is jointly organized by Physicians for Global Survival (1985 Nobel Peace Prize), the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, Nature Québec, the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility and the Coalition pour que le Québec ait meilleure mine. It also receives support from the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (Swiss chapter), the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Sustainable Development Institute, the Cree Nation of Mistissini, MiningWatch Canada, and a number of other local, national and international partners.
CONTEXT
The Symposium is occurring at a time when many organizations and governments question the future of nuclear power, currently providing about 11% of the world’s electricity. The year 2015 also marks the seventieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the corresponding United Nations negotiations of the Non Proliferation Treaty for the prevention and the abolition of nuclear arms. It will also see the tabling on a new UN treaty on climate change. Canada is one of the largest producers and exporters of
uranium worldwide, yet its nuclear energy output is in relative decline. Only two provinces still operate nuclear reactors: Ontario and New Brunswick. While uranium has been primarily mined from Saskatchewan, the provinces of British Columbia and Nova Scotia have officially banned uranium mining. Quebec recently shut down its sole nuclear reactor and has tasked the Bureau d’audiences publiques sur l’environnement (BAPE) with conducting an investigation on issues related to uranium mining. It is expected to release its report by May 20 2015. The Symposium aims to tackle these different issues and to provide recommendations to decision makers to better ensure protection for the human health, global security and a safe environment

It’s an 1980s pop music cliche that dates back to 1910.
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If you listen to the first few seconds of Bruno Mars’ “Finesse” (hint: listen to the Cardi B remix) you’ll hear a sound that immediately creates a sense of 80s hip-hop nostalgia. Yes, Cardi B’s flow is very Roxanne Shante, but the sound that drives that nostalgia home isn’t actually from the 1980s.
Robert Fink and the inventor of the Fairlight CMI, Peter Vogel, help me tell the story of the orchestra hit - a sound that was first heard in 1910 at the Paris Opera where the famed 20th century Russian composer Stravinsky debuted his first hit, The Firebird.
The video above is, in short, a history of the original orchestra hit sample from The Firebird Suite to the 1982 hit “Planet Rock” to “Finesse.” And as a treat, here’s a playlist of way more songs with orchestra hits than you probably wanted.
Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/user/estellecaswell/playlist/53plZYDXbG2GooieYDV7fs?si=PnXiBWLjRnWLTO46hY-F_A
Fairlight CMI app: Peter Vogel CMI by Peter Vogel Instruments Pty Ltdhttps://itunes.apple.com/us/app/peter-vogel-cmi/id420212505?mt=8
Robert Fink's paper: https://www.jstor.org/stable/3877522?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
Some songs don't just stick in your head, they change the music world forever. Join Estelle Caswell on a musical journey to discover the stories behind your favorite songs.
Check out the entire Vox Earworm playlist here: http://bit.ly/2QCwhMH
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Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com.
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(7 Nov 2018) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Great Falls, Montana - 7 November 2018
1. Sen. Jon Tester enters a room to announce that he's claiming victory in the Montana US Senate race
2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sen. Jon Tester, (D) Montana:
"I want to congratulate Matt Rosendale on a hard fought race. This was a tough race. It was a race that broke records both. I believe when it's all said and the number of people who voted in our great state and the amount of money that was spent, an unprecedented amount of money was spent in this race. It was a race that saw the president the United States come here four times. It was a race that saw his son come here probably that many times. The Vice president came here three times. But I want to say that Montanans spoke loud and clear about the direction they want Montana to go and the direction of our state"
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Great Falls, Montana - 7 November 2018
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sen. Jon Tester, (D) Montana:
"And quite frankly I hope the president comes back many times. I do. But not not for political rallies. In all seriousness, not for political rallies but to see the challenges we have in our state"
POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Great Falls, Montana - 5 July 2018
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Donald Trump, president, United States of America:
"Jon Tester showed his true colors with his shameful, dishonest attacks on a great man, a friend of mine, a man that I said why don't you run the VA, you'd be great. Navy Admiral Ronnie Jackson."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Washington, 16 January 2018
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adm. Ronny Jackson, physician, White House:
"The president's overall health is excellent. His cardiac performance during his physical exam was very good. He continues to enjoy the significant long term cardiac and overall health benefits that come from a lifetime of abstinence from tobacco and alcohol."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Great Falls, Montana - 7 November 2018
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Sen. Jon Tester, (D) Montana:
"We've got an opportunity over the next six years, in my case, and over the next two years for sure to do some really good work. I mentioned the issues whether it's public lands or health care. Veterans' care. Making sure that we have government accountability and a transparent government in reducing the amount of money that goes into these races. I mean it's crazy. These are bipartisan issues. Let's get her done. Ultimately I just want to say this. Thank you. And every one of you, you should be sleeping. But you're not. And I just want to say, Thank you. God bless you and God bless American."
STORYLINE:
Montana Democrat Jon Tester has won a third Senate term, beating Republican Matt Rosendale, the state auditor.
President Donald Trump had taken a personal interest in defeating Tester, and had visited the state to campaign against the incumbent. Trump had said he wanted to make Tester pay at the polls for helping derail a Trump nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Tester is the top Democrat on the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee.
Tester insisted that Montana voters across the political spectrum would support him after examining his record.
Trump held four rallies in Montana and sent his eldest son and Vice President Mike Pence to headline more appearances. Rosendale also got help from outside cash that poured into the race.
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"Monsters" Available Everywhere!
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/monsters-single/1449263537
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/0y028StnRTFzHhWIMOwk2D
Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/music/album/MattyBRaps_Monsters?id=B4jb2wtx3jy7okghs27dino4tou
Hi BFamily! Hope you enjoy the Official #Monsters Music Video! This project really means a lot to me because of it's message of love overcoming fear and temptation. We all face things in life that tear us down and constantly try to keep us separated from our destiny. I believe it's not about the things that happen to you, but the way that you choose to respond to life's obstacles.
Comment down below what you got out of this song and music video and thanks for watching!
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Monsters
MattyBRaps
Yeah Yeah
[Verse 1]
Always facing temptations
God I’m trying to be patient
All these places my mind takes me
Asking what’s the point of waiting
[Pre Chorus]
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
It’s in my head all the time
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
I face it everyday
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
It’s in my head all the time
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
All of this pressure on me and I’m like
[Chorus]
All these voices in my head
Don’t know which way to go
Monsters underneath my bed
I’ve been here before
All these voices in my head
But I won’t lose control
Monsters underneath my bed
But we are not friends
[Verse 2]
Did I mention
Sway back and forth in my conscience
No direction, but I feel you’re in my presence
I get lost help me find my way
What it cost for the dreams, I’ll pay
Tug of war right here with you
What I do
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
It’s in my head all the time
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
I face it everyday
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
It’s in my head all the time
It’s in my head, it’s on my mind
All of this pressure on me and I’m like
All these voices in my head
Don’t know which way to go
Monsters underneath my bed
I’ve been here before
All these voices in my head
But I won’t lose control
Monsters underneath my bed
But we are not friends
Monsters under my bed
But they’re not gonna win
Cause I’m not gonna let ‘em in
Not alone in this conflict
Who I am is in You, who I am is in You
(repeat x2)
All these voices in my head
Don’t know which way to go
Monsters underneath my bed
I’ve been here before
All these voices in my head
But I won’t lose control
Monsters underneath my bed
But we are not friends

Two paths have emerged in the current mining legislative landscape.
The first path would open up opportunities for mining, allow the United States to increase domestic production, create more jobs and enhance our national and economic security.
The second path leads to higher taxes and product costs, jeopardizing jobs. At the core of this negative path is a proposed $1.8 billion tax on the moving of dirt for the mining industry. This tax will exacerbate the domestic jobs problem and push even more industries overseas.
If mining taxes were raised, American businesses would be forced to get more materials overseas that we could be mining domestically—this increases our dependence on other countries. Minerals are among the most important components in the technologies protecting our nation. Foreign reliance leaves us in a vulnerable position.
Washington has a choice to make. You can help. You can tell your legislators that the right choice involves an increased use of domestic minerals to help U.S. economic growth and national security.
Visit http://actformining.org/national-actions/miningtax/ to make your voice heard.
Connect with NMA
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/MiningFan (@MiningFan)
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/actformining
Visit: http://mineralsmakelife.org/

http://inktalks.com
In April 2011, Arunima Sinha, a national level volleyball player, was thrown out of a running train by robbers who were after her gold chain. Her left leg crushed by the passing trains had to be amputated. This did not stop her from dreaming the impossible, on May 21st, 2013, Arunima summited Mount Everest. Watch as she takes us along on her journey in this passionate talk.
Please Note: This talk is available with English subtitles. Please enable YouTube Captions if the subtitles are not appearing.
ABOUT INK: INKtalks are personal narratives that get straight to the heart of issues in 18 minutes or less. We are committed to capturing and sharing breakthrough ideas, inspiring stories and surprising perspectives--for free!
Watch an INKtalk and meet the people who are designing the future--now.
Connect with us:
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ABOUT ARUNIMA SINHA:
Arunima is a former national level volleyball player who was thrown off a moving train in 2011. In order to save her life, the doctors had to amputate part of her left leg. In light of this event, Arunima became inspired by Yuvarj Singh, an international cricket player who successfully won his battle with cancer. As such, she was determined to climb Mount Everest. In 2013, Arunima became the first female amputee (and the first Indian amputee) to make the climb.
Arunima then went on to be the first female amputee to climb Mt. Kilamanjaro in Africa and Mt. Elbrus in Europe. She has been honoured with numerous awards and recognitions. Currently she is busy planning to open a sports academy for underprivileged and physically disabled children.
Subtitling credits: Vaibhav Mathur

Steven Crowder takes the streets once again to have real conversations with real people on hot button issues. In this edition, we talk abortion with the simple challenge: There Are Only 2 Genders. Change My Mind.
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Use promo codes "student" "veteran" "military" to get daily access for $69/year!
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Check out more of my videos!
UNDERCOVER IN ANTIFA: Their Tactics and Media Support Exposed!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmNz2jGzsDA
REAL CONVERSATIONS: I'm Pro-Gun | Change My Mind
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=APC2jnOSfhQ
Social Justice Warriors Get Owned In Epic Rant By Comedian (Crowder)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oss7KmiHLmA
HIDDEN CAM: "Gun Show Loophole" Exposed!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEihkjKNhN8
Crowder Crashes a Feminist Film Festival in Underwear!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWJT0egzAy0
FAIL: Eminem Rips Donald Trump on BET (PARODY)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrdT1rEO54c&t=34s
Pop culture and politics from the most politically incorrect comedy channel on the web. Hippies and Muslims hate me!

► Website: http://www.rammstein.com
► Shop: http://shop.rammstein.de
Premiere: July 9th, 2004
Shoot: June 2nd and June 3rd, 2004
Location: Arena in Treptow, outdoor shoot in front of the Deutsche Oper in Berlin
Director: Zoran Bihać
Single: Mein Teil
From the album: Reise, Reise
The new single MEIN TEIL contained two remixes by the Pet Shop Boys and one by Arthur Baker, as well as the original version of the song. MEIN TEIL was also released on vinyl.

Walkers! So excited to finally release my new single «Different World» with the talented Sofia Carson, K-391 and CORSAK! I am blessed to have a voice that can spread the important message behind it, and I truly believe that together we can create a Different World. Let’s do this🙏🏻
Let me know what you think by liking, sharing and commenting in the section below!
My debut album, “Different World" is finally out!
Check it out here: https://lnk.to/AW-DW-Album
Listen to the single here: https://AlanWalker.lnk.to/DifferentWorld
#CreateADifferentWorld
- Alan
*Credits*
Director & Editor:
Alexander Zarate Frez
Concept by:
MER
Graphics:
Simon Compagnet
Additional footage from:
Bradley Wickham
Bror Bror
Lyrics:
All we know
Left untold
Beaten by a broken dream
Nothing like
What it used to be
We’ve been chasing our demons down an empty road
Been watching our castle turning into dust
Escaping our shadows just to end up here once more
And we both know
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time
We are stuck on answers we can’t find
But we got time
And even though we might have lost tonight
The skyline reminds us of a different time
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time
Broken smiles
Tired eyes
I can feel your longing heart
Call my name
Howling from afar
We’ve been fighting our demons just to stay afloat
Been building our castle just to watch it fall
Been running forever just to end up here once more
And now we know
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time
We are stuck on answers we can’t find
But we got time
And even though we might have lost tonight
The skyline reminds us of a different time
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time
Take me back
Back to the mountain side
Under the northern lights
Chasing the stars
Take me back
Back to the mountain side
When we were full of life
Back to the start
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time
We are stuck on answers we can’t find
But we got time
And even though we might have lost tonight
The skyline reminds us of a different time
This is not the world we had in mind
But we got time

TechKnow visits the city of Chattanooga, Tennessee, to explore how the city came to have the fastest Internet in the country.
The municipal power company, the Electric Power Board (EPB) set up "The Gig" fibre optic network in 2010 to enable a smart electricity grid, which also brought ultra high-speed Internet to Chattanooga's citizens.
But to get this fibre-optic service, Chattanooga had to go up against Comcast, the country's largest cable company, and the state cable association, which sued the EPB twice to try and stop them from going ahead with "The Gig".
State senator Janice Bowling is fighting a legislative battle to bring high-speed Internet to the rest of the state. It's a fight that has pitted her against the "legacy providers" through lobbyists representing, for instance, Comcast.
The city has reinvented itself into a tech hub, with start-ups such as 3D OPS which makes 3-D printed models of organs from medical scans like MRIs to allow surgeons to practice procedures, and has attracted businesses like Amazon and Volkswagen.
But beyond the city limits, and the 72,000 homes and businesses benefitting from "The Gig", it's a different story.
A few miles from 1-gig speed Internet in Chattanooga we meet the Van Hook family who only have access to painfully slow satellite Internet. No cable provider will provide service to their street. And while the EPB wants to provide them with service and don't mind laying the cable, state law prevents them from doing so. The Van Hooks are lobbying against this. Others who are similarly outside EPB's area of service have started grassroots fights.
We meet students who attend school in Chattanooga yet only have satellite Internet at home. Bad weather can affect their connections, and students must resort to doing homework at school or finding spaces in the city where they can work like the church.
Digital access is divided across the United States: 19 million people don't have access to fixed broadband and in cities like Miami, New Orleans and Dallas, over one-third of people do not have access to high-speed Internet.
In this TechKnow episode, we also meet 'Working Dogs for Conservation' in Montana which trains dogs to sniff out endangered species and also locate invasive ones. We see one dog detect invasive mussels, which clog industrial pipes in Montana. The dogs have been deployed to 18 states and 13 countries. The next stop for one trained dog is Zambia, where it will work at a checkpoint to stop vehicles transporting ivory.
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DOUG BRUGGE (USA)
Professor, Tufts University Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Co-editor of “The Navajo
People and Uranium Mining”
LEONA MORGAN (USA)
Leona Morgan, Dene No Nukes, former coordinator Eastern Navajo Dine Against Uranium Mining
THE SYMPOSIUM
The World Uranium Symposium addressed issues arising from the nuclear fuel chain, from mining uranium to its end-uses and byproducts for civilian or military purposes. Both scientific and community-based, the Symposium was organized around the following themes: health, environment, economy, ethics, governance, human rights and the rights of indigenous peoples. Open to the public, the symposium had hosted more than 300 people per day from 14 to 16 April 2015, and had included local, national and international representatives from the sectors of health, research, industry, education, civil society, policy makers and indigenous communities. local, national and/or international media were present. All presentations of the symposium will be posted in electronic formats (text and / or videos) after the Symposium, in French and / or English.
• April 14 (Day 1): Uranium mines and the nuclear life cycle : health and environmental issues
• April 15 (Day 2): Civil and military nuclear : ethics, economics and political issues
• April 16 (Day 3): Human rights, indigenous peoples' rights and governance issues
ORGANIZATIONS INVOLVED
The Symposium is jointly organized by Physicians for Global Survival (1985 Nobel Peace Prize), the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, Nature Québec, the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility and the Coalition pour que le Québec ait meilleure mine. It also receives support from the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (Swiss chapter), the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Sustainable Development Institute, the Cree Nation of Mistissini, MiningWatch Canada, and a number of other local, national and international partners.
CONTEXT
The Symposium is occurring at a time when many organizations and governments question the future of nuclear power, currently providing about 11% of the world’s electricity. The year 2015 also marks the seventieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the corresponding United Nations negotiations of the Non Proliferation Treaty for the prevention and the abolition of nuclear arms. It will also see the tabling on a new UN treaty on climate change. Canada is one of the largest producers and exporters of
uranium worldwide, yet its nuclear energy output is in relative decline. Only two provinces still operate nuclear reactors: Ontario and New Brunswick. While uranium has been primarily mined from Saskatchewan, the provinces of British Columbia and Nova Scotia have officially banned uranium mining. Quebec recently shut down its sole nuclear reactor and has tasked the Bureau d’audiences publiques sur l’environnement (BAPE) with conducting an investigation on issues related to uranium mining. It is expected to release its report by May 20 2015. The Symposium aims to tackle these different issues and to provide recommendations to decision makers to better ensure protection for the human health, global security and a safe environment

The Pebble Project is a mineral exploration and development project owned by the Pebble Limited Partnership, an Alaska limited partnership formed between a wholly owned US subsidiary of Anglo American PLC and a wholly owned entity of Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd.
Based in Anchorage, Alaska, the Pebble Partnership is focused exclusively on the responsible development of the Pebble Project in a way that will optimize benefits for local communities while protecting important environmental values and traditional ways of life. The partnership was formed to advance the Pebble Project, one of the most important concentrations of copper, gold, molybdenum and silver in the world, toward permitting, construction and operations.

This is the first video of my Wild West Ride 2017.
My bud, and I, both on Yamaha FJ-09s, tearing it up out West.
6 days, 6 states, 2,765 miles.
6 days of wild fun through Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Idaho.

FOR HALF A CENTURY, THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT PAID LITTLE HEED TO THE BRISTOL BAY REGION OF ALASKA THANKS MOSTLY TO UNFINISHED LAND DISTRIBUTIONS WROUGHT BY THE 1971 ALASKA NATIVE CLAIMS SETTLEMENT ACT AND THE ALASKA STATEHOOD ACT OF 1958.
BUT AS THOSE MANDATES REACHED RESOLUTION NEAR THE END OF THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION, THE BLM OPENED ABOUT 1 MILLION ACRES OF THAT TRACT TO POTENTIAL MINING AND OIL AND GAS EXPLORATION.
AMONG THE FIRST CLAIMS WAS A COPPER AND GOLD PROSPECT CALLED PEBBLE MINE, WHICH THREATENS AN IMMENSE AREA OF PRISTINE WILDLAND AND PURE WATERS WITH COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND 10 BILLION TONS OF TOXIC WASTE.
A COALITION INCLUDING FISHERS AND BIG-GAME HUNTERS, MORE THAN 350 ORGANIZATIONS TOTAL AT PRESS TIME, LED BY THE SPORTSMAN'S ALLIANCE FOR ALASKA AND TROUT UNLIMITED, ARE HEADING THE EFFORT TO PROTECT THE REGION. AND THEY NEED OUR HELP.
PLEASE VISIT WWW.SAVEBRISTOLBAY.ORG TO LEARN MORE.